Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
The Larks Still Bravely Singing
The Larks Still Bravely Singing | Aster Glenn Gray
1 post | 1 read
Since he was wounded, David has been batted from hospital to hospital like a shuttlecock, leaving him adrift and anxious. His renewed friendship with Robert gives him a much-needed sense of peace and stability. Slowly, David opens up to Robert about the nervous fears that plague him, and when Robert responds with sympathy and support, David finds himself feeling much more than friendship. But he’s afraid that he’s already a burden on Robert, and that asking for more will only strain their developing bond. A shattering breakup leaves Robert convinced that he is a destructive force in romantic relationships. When he finds himself falling in love with David, an old friend from boarding school, he\'s sure that he shouldn’t confess his feelings. But as their meandering conversations drift from books and poetry to more intimate topics, Robert’s love deepens - and so do his fears of hurting David. Content warning: period-typical homophobia and ableism (probably less than is strictly period typical, but this is a romance novel, not a historical essay), implied/referenced suicide The Great War cost Robert his left leg and his first love. Can these two wounded soldiers heal each other?
LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
blurb
Faranae
post image

October reading roundup - doesn't include short stories outside of anthologies. Nothing was egregiously bad this time, though a few weren't half as good as they could have been.

The tagged book is easily my favorite, and I had to add it to Litsy. Absolute catnip for me - queer, disabled men in WW1 dealing with their PTSD without sounding like a modern therapist, and talking literature. The cover is not quite right but it could be worse.